Monthly Archives: October 2013

There are two significant (to me) things about my cycling that have me hopeful for becoming faster next year. First, my new breathing routine. Forcing myself to exhale more-deeply every other breath has really helped extend my capabilities. I still sound like a steam engine on a steep climb, but I’m a faster steam engine. Second is my new power meter. It’s really helping me learn what I can do, what I might be leaving on the table at any given time vs my full potential.

Of course, winter is coming, days are getting shorter and colder, and inevitably I’ll be getting a bit heavier for a few months, and slower. This winter is going to be tougher than most, because I’ve made some real progress over the past few months, posting my fastest time on Kings and Old LaHonda since I started logging them on Strava (which goes back to 2008, or 5 years). I’m going to watch those times head in the wrong direction for a few months. I’m going to have to pay more attention to my weight. And I’ll turn 58 too soon, in March, before it gets much warmer, before I lose my winter weight, before I really start trending upward again. This is the first time I’ve really thought about the fact that my birthday comes at the wrong time of year; it will give unwarranted credence to the idea that I’m slowing down as I get older. I don’t think that’s going to happen. I think I’m going to be faster next year than I was this.

Or not. But today’s ride was another in a series where I wasn’t the slowest and felt like I had quite a bit more in the tank than I was required to use. Chris (younger guy who works with Karl at REI, as opposed to slightly-older Chris who’s faster than anybody should be for as little time as he has to ride), Eric, JR & Kevin (my son, who’s now gone 48 hours without a seizure, a major accomplishment at the moment!) were on the ride. Nobody seemed to want to ride really fast, but JR and I played with each other a little bit and my legs held up. Right now, I’m feeling pretty good about my riding. –MIke–

So Toys R Us puts this commercial together and expects us to embrace them? How long ago was it that Calvin & Hobbes had a few strips censored from some newspapers because they thought Calvin was a symbol for all manner of bad things kids could do? All the while touching on various philosophical, moral & ethical issues? And while Calvin fantasized about the school blowing up, I mean seriously, at some point, who didn’t, it was just that. A fantasy. Calvin knew he had to come back to earth and deal with the real world. And besides, grade school kids weren’t reading Calvin & Hobbes. Their parents were.

But this commercial… is it for real? Is there any other way to see it than having massive disrespect for education and the teaching profession, for the environment, for anything having to do with learning and/or having more lasting value than the latest toy that is designed to break before one is completely bored with it (and realizes that that’s the way it is with most toys?). An endless cycle without substance, leaving you without satisfaction but always wanting something new?

And no, I can’t make any sense of what I’ve written here either. I just know that I found this commercial horribly offensive. –Mike–